FALL RIVER — Aaron Hernandez’s lawyers are seeking a court order to compel the New England Patriots to hand over “any and all” internal team records pertaining to their former tight end.

Hernandez’s defense team wants the Patriots to provide medical documents, psychological test results, any drug or alcohol abuse-related records, internal scouting and investigative reports, as well as X-rays, MRIs and CT scans from Hernandez’s three years with the organization.

The attorneys say their request is not “a fishing expedition” because the Patriots’ records are “potentially evidentiary and relevant in this case in that they may bear upon his circumstances and state-of-mind prior to the alleged offense, as well as his physical and mental state at the time.”

Hernandez, 24, is charged with murder and firearm offenses stemming from the June 17, 2013, murder of Odin Lloyd in the North Attleborough Industrial Park. A jogger found Lloyd, 27, of Dorchester, who had been shot five times with a .45-caliber handgun, the next morning.

Prosecutors allege Hernandez orchestrated the murder two days after he and Lloyd had a disagreement at a Boston nightclub. Hernandez had also expressed concern that Lloyd knew about his alleged marijuana use, firearms and the location of Hernandez’s “flop house” in Franklin, prosecutors said.

Hernandez is also charged with two counts of murder for his alleged role in a 2012 double homicide in Boston. Suffolk County prosecutors allege he shot and killed two men after they bumped into him inside a nightclub and spilled a drink on him.

During a motion hearing Monday in Fall River Superior Court, Hernandez’s lawyers said they had written and called the Patriots, but never received a response. They sent letters last July and September, and called the Patriots’ front office in August, to no avail. A team receptionist refused to provide Hernandez’s lawyers the name of the Patriots’ legal counsel due to “policies,” according to court documents.

On Tuesday, Hernandez’s defense team filed a motion requesting that the court issue a subpoena for the Patriots’ records. Hernandez, who played for the Patriots from 2010 to 2013, signed a waiver authorizing the team to release his personnel file, including psychological testing and “social worker information,” to his lawyers, according to court documents.